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Studies have claimed major health benefits for standing for much of the day as
opposed to sitting. The difference is marked, explains Michael Mosley.
Guess how many hours a day you spend sitting? Fewer than eight? More than 10? A
recent survey found that many of us spend up to 12 hours a day sitting on our
bottoms looking at computers or watching television. If you throw in the seven
hours we spend sleeping then that adds up to a remarkable 19 hours a day being
sedentary.
Sitting down as much as this is clearly bad for us and some studies suggest
that those who sit all day live around two years less than those who are more
active. Most of us are guilty of excess sitting. We sit at work, in the car and
at home, moving only to shift from one seat to another.
Even if you exercise on a regular basis that may not be enough. There is
mounting evidence that exercise will not undo the damage done by prolonged
sitting. Our technology has made us the most sedentary humans in history.
So why is sitting so damaging? One thing it does is change the way our bodies
deal with sugar. When you eat, your body breaks down the food into glucose,
which is then transported in the blood to other cells.
Glucose is an essential fuel but persistently high levels increase your risk of
diabetes and heart disease. Your pancreas produces the hormone insulin to help
get your glucose levels back down to normal, but how efficiently your body does
that is affected by how physically active you are
We wanted to see what would happen if we took a group of people who normally
spend their day sitting in an office and ask them to spend a few hours a day on
their feet instead.
Standing while you are working may seem rather odd, but it is a practice with a
long tradition. Winston Churchill wrote while working at a special standing
desk, as did Ernest Hemingway and Benjamin Franklin.
So with Dr John Buckley and a team of researchers from the University of
Chester we conducted a simple experiment. We asked 10 people who work at an
estate agents to stand for at least three hours a day for a week.
Soldier's legs on parade
Our lucky volunteers had mixed feelings about how they would get on.
"It'll be different, but looking forward to it, yes "
"I think my feet might hurt - I'll have to wear sensible shoes "
"The small of my back, it's going to hurt "
"I'm worried that I'm not going to be able to stand up for all that time
[Laughs nervously]"
We asked all the volunteers to wear an accelerometer - a movement monitor - to
record just how much moving about they were doing. They also wore heart rate
monitors and had glucose monitors that measured their blood sugar levels
constantly, day and night.
New York City marathon finishing line The equivalent of 10 marathons a year?
The evidence that standing up is good for you goes back to at least the 1950s
when a study was done comparing bus conductors (who stand) with bus drivers
(who don't). This study, published in the Lancet, showed that the bus
conductors had around half the risk of developing heart disease of the bus
drivers.
Since then prolonged sitting has not only been linked to problems with blood
glucose control, but also a sharp reduction in the activity of an enzyme called
lipoprotein lipase, which breaks down blood fats and makes them available as a
fuel to the muscles. This reduction in enzyme activity leads to raised levels
of triglycerides and fats in the blood, increasing the risk of heart disease.
We had good reason to believe that standing would make a difference to our
volunteers, but we were also a little anxious as to how they would get on. This
was the first time an experiment like this had been conducted in the UK. Would
our volunteers stick to it?
They did. One woman with arthritis even found that standing actually improved
her symptoms.
The Chester researchers took measurements on days when the volunteers stood,
and when they sat around. When they looked at the data there were some striking
differences. As we had hoped, blood glucose levels fell back to normal levels
after a meal far more quickly on the days when the volunteers stood than when
they sat.
There was also evidence, from the heart rate monitors that they were wearing,
that by standing they were burning more calories.
"If we look at the heart rates," John Buckley explains, "we can see they are
quite a lot higher actually - on average around 10 beats per minute higher and
that makes a difference of about 0.7 of a calorie per minute."
Stand-up guys
Donald Rumsfeld
Ernest Hemingway (Nobel prize winning novelist)
Oscar Hammerstein II (co-writer, The Sound of Music)
Donald Rumsfeld (Former US defence secretary)
Now that doesn't sound like much, but it adds up to about 50 calories an hour.
If you stand for three hours a day for five days that's around 750 calories
burnt. Over the course of a year it would add up to about 30,000 extra
calories, or around 8lb of fat.
"If you want to put that into activity levels," Dr Buckley says, "then that
would be the equivalent of running about 10 marathons a year. Just by standing
up three or four hours in your day at work."
Dr Buckley thinks that although going out and doing exercise offers many proven
benefits, our bodies also need the constant, almost imperceptible increase in
muscle activity that standing provides. Simple movement helps us to keep our
all-important blood sugar under control.
We can't all stand up at work but the researchers believe that even small
adjustments, like standing while talking on the phone, going over to talk to a
colleague rather than sending an email, or simply taking the stairs, will help.
I have, of course, written this article while standing.